pihole 2.8 tft lcd sheild in stock
Update - fbtft has now been included in the latest raspbian image and uses Device Tree - see this thread on how to configure the very latest raspbian os
This means that the console output goes to the TFT display much sooner into the boot sequence. Also he has created a ready-made image for you to download so that you do not need to go through the configuration procedure below
this is the latest version of the first and original TFT touch panel display board designed specifically for the Raspberry Pi. This hardware version is compatible for all 40-way GPIO Pi"s, so that is the A+, the B+ and the latest Pi 2B and uses the established HY28B display board which features a resolution of 320 x 240 at 65k colours. As usual the display utilises the excellent fbtft drivers authored by notro, only now those drivers are included in the very latest raspbian image, although not currently included in the image available from the foundations download page. I expect this to change in the very near future so that the rpi-update step is no longer required.
It is recommended to use the latest raspbian image , at the time of posting is dated 2015-02-16, to configure using an SSH session remotely, with no TV/Monitor connected to the HDMI port, and to connect the 2.8" Display board right from the start prior to connecting power to the Pi.
This guide will show you how to setup and configure your Pi hole to display the pi hole system status and ads blocked using the Pi Supply Media Center HAT. The Pi Supply Media Center HAT is a 2.8″ TFT display that connects to your Raspberry Pi, and includes other feature such as IR receiver, restive touch and navigation buttons that can be soldered to the PCB.
Step 4 – Install the Media Center HAT software. We want to display the main output on the TFT display only, from the command line type in the following:
This requires installing PADD (Pi-hole Ad Detection Display) and Pi-Hole on the Adafruit 2.8" PiTFT Plus to display useful and fun statistics such as Amount of Pi-holed Advertisements,and the top offending domain attempting to serve pesky advertisements to your network.
PiTFT Plus Assembled 320x240 2.8" TFT - one of the cutest little display for the Raspberry Pi. It features a 2.8" display with 320x240 16-bit color pixels and a resistive touch overlay.
Adafruit Mini PiTFT - full color 240x135 pixel IPS display with great visibility at all angles. The TFT uses only the SPI port so it"s very fast - and unlike the OLED display, it will not dim over time
All you need is a USB power supply and a USB cable (not included cause you probably have spares) to power the Pi Zero WH+PiTFT. You can put it anywhere in your home or office where WiFi is available.
We upgraded our Pi Zero Pi Hole with a little color display, that makes setting up clients easy and also gives you some nifty stats! If you want a kit with a huge color display for tons of stats and ad-blockin’ goodness check out our guide and kit for using Pi-Hole with the Raspberry Pi 3 and PiTFT 2.8″ color screen
Adafruit Mini PiTFT — full color 240×135 pixel IPS display with great visibility at all angles. The TFT uses only the SPI port so it’s very fast — and unlike the OLED display, it will not dim over time
All you need is a USB power supply and a USB cable (not included cause you probably have spares) to power the Pi Zero WH+PiTFT. You can put it anywhere in your home or office where WiFi is available.
Update - fbtft has now been included in the latest raspbian image and uses Device Tree - see this thread on how to configure the very latest raspbian os
This means that the console output goes to the TFT display much sooner into the boot sequence. Also he has created a ready-made image for you to download so that you do not need to go through the configuration procedure below
I finally got around to installing a Pi-hole on one of the Raspberry Pi"s I have lying around. It"s running on a Raspberry Pi 3b with a PiTFT 2.8" monitor attached on the GPIO pins, displaying stats through the PADD bash script.
For those wondering: Go to pi-hole.net to roll your own. It"s really easy to do. The screen is not necessary, I just find the at-a-glance statistics very satisfying. Also, the TFT screen is quite bright, so keep that in mind.
This guide will show you how to setup and configure your Pi hole to display the pi hole system status and ads blocked using the Pi Supply Media Center HAT. The Pi Supply Media Center HAT is a 2.8″ TFT display that connects to your Raspberry Pi, and includes other feature such as IR receiver, restive touch and navigation buttons that can be soldered to the PCB.
Step 4 – Install the Media Center HAT software. We want to display the main output on the TFT display only, from the command line type in the following:
Display real-time estimate of commute time between two locations based on traffic and historic data on a Character LCD using Raspberry Pi, Python 3 and Google Maps Distance Matrix API. If you have a LCD and a Raspberry Pi lying around or want to purchase one or if you are often late for work like me and want to have a traffic monitor then this project might be for you.
Pimoroni’s GFX HATis a shiny new LCD Display with RGB Backlight and Touch Buttons! This is a seriously snazzy LCD that can display complex graphics for all your headless Pi games and animations. While the LCD is monochrome 128×64 pixels, the backlight can be set to different RGB colors to indicate.
The HyperPixel 4.0″ is designed to fit nicely onto the Raspberry Pi Zero, Pi 3, Pi 2 or Model A+ / B+ (any Pi with a 2×20 connector). Not for use with the old Pi 1 with 2×13 connector. If you’d like to use a 3.5″ display with the original Pi A or Pi B, check out the SPI-based PiTFT 3.5″
This HyperPixel 4.0″ is designed to fit nicely onto the Raspberry Pi Zero, Pi 3, Pi 2 or Model A+ / B+ (any Pi with a 2×20 connector). Not for use with the old Pi 1 with 2×13 connector. If you’d like to use a 3.5″ display with the original Pi A or Pi B, check out the SPI-based PiTFT 3.5″
This requires installing PADD (Pi-hole Ad Detection Display) and Pi-Hole on the Adafruit 2.8″ PiTFT Plus to display useful and fun statistics such as Amount of Pi-holed Advertisements, and the top offending domain attempting to serve pesky advertisements to your network.
PiTFT Plus Assembled 320×240 2.8″ TFT – one of the cutest little display for the Raspberry Pi. It features a 2.8″ display with 320×240 16-bit color pixels and a resistive touch overlay.
Add some sizzle to your Arduino project with a beautiful large touchscreen display shield with built in microSD card connection and a capacitive touchscreen. This TFT display is big (2.8" diagonal) bright (4 white-LED backlight) and colourful (18-bit 262,000 different shades)! 240x320 pixels with individual pixel control. It has way more resolution than a black and white 128x64 display. As a bonus, this display has a capacitive touchscreen attached to it already, so you can detect finger presses anywhere on the screen.